I If the 1937 Nobel Peace Prize Winner iff THE WEATHER Humidity u p. iii. yesterday ...43 Highest tempeaiuie yt-.-ii-t'iiuy . 70 (.invent t tm jm-nil tire last night. ...M Precipitation for 2t hours - Q Preeip. since first of iiumtli .. Ml i'nri;i. from Sept. i, . , . jh .y Hi ficiency wince Sept. 1, PKJti i.L'x Fair; W-rmer Friday. VOL. XLI 10. 79 OF ROSEBURG iwmm mm Editorials TV ! JHN DAY un uie . m Day's News ly FRANK JKNKINS TPUIS dispatch comes from Cleve- lan. I (Ohio): , "Four hundred policemen stood guard today in Cleve land's steel strike riot area to hi ing peace temporarily, at least after one of the wor;l nights of violence in this Hty'H hi.-.lory." Tint violence was bet wren men who want to go on v. orking and stokers who want to force them to quit working. "Ills dispatch leni, Oregon: comes from Ka- "Kmployees affiliated with tin American Federation oi Labor ' at the Stinison Lumber coinpany, at Gaston, m-ai For est Grove, appealed to Gover nor .MurLin today for polio protection so t hey may go back tj work next week at the mi II, which ha:'- hec-i clo.-.et' for nine weeks." The head of the AFL union til Gaston says a majority of the mil! employees belong lo the AFL union, but that the do union liireetens a 'bloody affair" if the men go back to work. T STILL looks as if the strike situation throughout the coun try will have to gi!l worse before It can get any better. A ND this more or less interest ing dispatch comes from tVnshington: "Secretary of Stale Hull said today (Tuesday) the American ambassador kyo and Peiping hail been in structed to express the hope to the Japanese and Chinese governments that hostilities would he avoided at I'eiping." 117 KM. H'fl iin-o to 1)0 hopeful. " but a disialch from Shanghai, carrying the niini date us Secre- (Continued on pate 4) PARIS. July 2X. (AIM Three justices in criminal court today cave Mine. Madeline La Ferrlere a one-year suspended sentence after a speedy trial on charges of shooting Count Charles de Chani hrun, who she accused of breaking up her friendship with Premier Iteuito Mussolini of Italy. The Judges, who had barred pari of the trial to the public and press, also fined the- w oman Jul) francs I s:t.7i I. then ordered her freed under the suspended sent ence. The young woman was charged with assault and illegal possession of three revolvers alter sue shot De Chatnbruu. the former French ambassador to Italy, as h" board- ed a train in the Paris Nord sta tion lasi March K. He recovered. I e C'amriin told Investigators lit knew the woman only as u newspaper correspondent ami ar ranged an interview with il dure at her request. Later, when sin1 professed infatuation for Musso lini, he Chambrmi said he inform ed i he Italian premier of her remarks. WOMAN WHO SHOT ENVOY LIBERATED! Woman Commissioned Major For Heroism at Shiloh Passes on at 97 SANTA TlAIiBA HA. Calif., July, 20 - (AIM Funeral services will be held tomorrow at the Kpis. copal church for Dr. Arabella Macomber Reynolds, who. for her! mission more than half the off i iiiercitnl aid on the battlefield at iters!" Shiloh, was given a major's coin-j Accordinely he elevated her to mission by the governor of Illinois, the rank of major. The seal of the Dr. Reynolds, or Major IMy state of Illinois was appended to nobis, as she was known, died In the commission, her apartment hero yesterday nf- i Shortly after the Civil war Dr. ter a year's illness. She was i)7 Reynolds visited California, then years of age. and never before had , went to Chicago to study memcme been ill, friends said. Ah a young woman. Dr. Reynolds was permitted to accompany her husband, a sergeant, later com mis- Eioned a lieutenant, to Shiloh, one of the bloodiest battles in the war h.'twpeu the states. I'nder fire she dressed the wounds of Union sol - diers. Iater she became a sur- peon's assistant. REVIEW ) C I nnQuCDC mm i . IViETED LIFE Crum, Third of Trio, Given 25 Years; Crime Plans of Bandits Told By U. S. Attorney. PORTLANf), July 20 -(AIM Federal Judge Fee sentenced two of the three John Day bank rob bers to life in prison today and ordered t h - t hi rd to serve 25 yf ars. Lloyd Markdoll, confessed leader, and Pahiclt Kushmaii, Ciuatilla Indian, drew life sent ences, while Chester Crum, who changed his plea from innocent to guilty yesterday, was sentenced to 25 years. Akiiiaigh the court did not cc.ai mi ut, il was presumed that Crum drew the lighter sentence because, unlike his companions, he had not previously served time in a peni tonlia ry. Glum ami crestfallen, the trio, t who less than three weeks ago robbed the ( Ira nt county bank at John Day of $:i,7SS, heal the as sistant cashier, shot a citizen and engaged police in a gun battle near Arlington before being cap tured, stood before the court. Judge Fee asked Markdoll and Ibishmnn, who pleaded guilty last week shortly after iheir arrest, whether they had any statement to make. Kach replied dully, Counsel for Crum made n short appeal on the grounds thai ltiH client had never served time in a prison. Fiiniously,- Carl Donaugh, Unit ed Stales attorney, had urged the court to Inflict the maximum pen ally upon the men and In a dra matic review of the case had dis eased for the first time the pre na rat ions of the trio for the rob bery. Crum Has Chance The court's sentence places Ha i kdoll and llushinan in prison for life without hope of parole hut Crum, while, he may not be paroled because of the severity of the offense, can shorten his sent ence by good behavior. Sentence passed. Hie trio march ed in silence from the courtroom to he taken almost immediately to the federal prison at McNeil's is land. So far as could be learned, no relatives of the men appeared. Donaugh revealed that Harkdoll ami Crum had plotted the robbery for soiiki weeks, leaving their homes in Coquille and getting rooms in a hotel at John -Day across the sifcet from (be bank, where they had watched the move meni of bank oflicvrs. timing their habiis. About a week before the holdup, they went to the home of Oscar lloverson, assistant cashier, whom they ha ddeeided to use as their they had decided to use as their (Cotitiuued on page G) WILD DOGS PREY ON SHEEP, TURKEYS The mystery of continuous t hells or turkeys, chickens and sheep in the Creeu district was reported solved today. Farmers in that district have been puzzled by the frequent disappearance of iowis a tut animals, hut vere till able tn find traces of a thief. The offender, however, was located to day by Tom FlPtcher, dog law en forcement officer, v. hu discovered a den or wild clogs. A female and eight pups were located. One pup was killed and two were captured alive, but the mother dog escaped w it h live of the pups. Arrange ments are being made to capture ihe other animals. Detis and trails found on the hilltop inhabited by the dojs were littered with bones. When Coventor Yates heard her accounts of the battle, according to the diary the woman kept, be exclaimed : she deserves a com- and received her dere She prac- Jticed for 3m years. In IMS she was sent to Manila for Clara Harton to I establish b hospital. She taught i school in the Philippine islands for two years. She was an or- eaniter of (he Ladies of the G. A. lit. in Chicago. She is survived by a number of 'nieces and nephews. Paid According to FAROUK, AT 18, INSTALLED AS FIRST RULER OF EGYPT UNDER INDEPENDENT STATUS CAIItO, F.gypl, July 20--AP) The glory of Kgypt's ancient phai oahs was reborn today when his majesty Farouk the First, a stal wart , f inn-chinned youl h of 1 K, was invested as the fhsl king of an independent Kgypt. He vowed "by almighty Cod to respect and obey the constitution ami laws of the Kgyptian people, safeguard my country's Independ ence and defend its torriiurv."- With royal dimity, the husky lad took the oath before his as sembled chamber and senate to become King of Misr. hud of Nu bia and the Sudan and sovereign of Kordofan and Dargour. His tr., nun, unit subjects wildly celebrated his ascension, marked here by fanfare and elaborate ritual. Furottk will be strictly a consli-i mtlonal monarch. There is no crown of K-,ypl and the ceremony was an investiture J raiher than a coronathm In the . wean rn rn sense. i no mikk'mi'iii that Farouk should be crowned with the ;i,iMKr-year-old d'ad.m of Tut-Ankh-Amen had been over ruled because the actual crow n ing of a king is not in accord v. lib Islamic law. Farouk is the first Invested king of Kgypf. His father, Fuad. the First, had changed the title from the traditional one of sul tan to king. A young man. still lacking his full mujority under Fgyptiau law. Farouk has become ruler of a na tion which only last year gained its Independence under the Anglo Kgyptiau treaty of aUiancc at the end of 55 years of Urlllsh - military occupation. I he ceremony lost noihing In Ira ma through Farouk's insisl- Board Favorable to Unit in Farm Area but Shies at Mountain St retell. The stale highway commission was reported in dispatches from Portland today to be favorably in clined toward the proposal ot tak ing over the Itoseburg-Itock creek section of the NoiUh I'mpqua high way as a stale secondary road. A local delegation appearing before the commission urged that the en tire Noil h I'mpiiua highway be placed on the secondary highway system. The commission, however, opposed taking over Ihe surveyed section through the forest, but raised no objections to the section which serves the agricultural area between Itnsehnrg and Itock creek. The delegation, including A. C Marsters. C. W. Clark. County Judge (ieorge tjutne ami u . t. Harding, serretary of the chamberi OI commerce, picuumi im- u. h.iuk- III. UMPQIU ROAD TAKE-OVER If ED completion of the proposed new . m. w east and west highway thiough Wflshini;l(in Senator 'Nye (li the Cascades. x.D.I reiterates statement that The group from Iloseburg also f,Mi()a a,or agents showing "mi asked that completion of the llose-i ,inp prefei em e" for CtO; Assist- buig-Shady Point section ol "ant Secretary of lhor Mrdrudy Pacific highway south or inn cny be made the next order of busi ness in that area. Harding said the people ot Rose burg hoped for the reconstruction of 7fl miles of the highway south ward to (Hants Pass, contending I hat T..") per cent of the traffic from the south slops at the latter city because of the condition of the highway to the north. K. H. llaldock. highway engineer, esti mated the job would cost about S i.UUM.OHII. CONVICT PURPOSELY CUTS OFF HIS HAND SAN K!lNClSCi, .Inly "'K (.11 From Alcatiaz i.-tlaud came a story today that one of the on- victs in Ihe prison forties mot ue liberately chopped off hi. O A II band with an ae. The story, which prii-oii authori ties did not deny, published in the Sun Francisco Chronicle, numed the prison only as "Pen lval." Secretly obtaining an axe. he filed the edge to razor-shm-piiem. Then, last night, the Chronicle's story said, he held the axe In bis right band, pluced his left IkmhI a block and, wit a sweeping .Mroke, j severed the hand He is said to bnve banded the axe to another prisoner when lhV maimed man was rushed to the hospital. No motiv for the acttou was advanced. Results Achieved, Instead of Theory Merit, He May Get Enough to Repay Him THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 29. 1937. Fill ft I King Farouk ence on abandonment of orlgintii plans for a religious ceremony, in which he would have been girt with the sacred jeweled sword of Mohamed AH Ihe ('.real in the Kl Fitai mosque. Concealed ratlin - microphones ealrlPd aroiik s vow to- the . moiesr village of bis kingdom. At least one bind speak'er was install ed in every center of population. SE Buffalo Food Strike Ends in Part; San Francisco Hotel War Settled. IH'FFALO. N. Y.. July 211 (AIM (iroceries rushed to empty store shelves as 1.00(1 truck cl riv ers, on strike for eight days, re turn tn wneeis at higher wages and with preferential shops. Strike ol 1 ,000 union butchers continued. Pittsburgh Twenty-two hund red miners resume work at three lleihleheiu Si eel corporal ion mines, ending two-week sympathy strike; union prepares to nego tiate nn new working agreement. Cleveland Police consider double shift duty to check assaults and vundow smashing at Itepuhlir Steel corporation strike scenes. San Francisco - Hotels rush to restore normal operations after S!t-day strike ends with pact to preclude strikes and lockouts the next lour years; set I lenient pro- , , f .n-hit nil Ion mi whl'h hi replies he is taking no sides In settlement of Apex Hosiery mill strike at Philadelphia; Henator Itailcy (D-N.C.) in commiltee mi roi tty report says "army itself should have been called out" to guard mail during steel strike; path cleared for speedy senate vote ou wage-hour bill. Klkinf. W. Va. - Ninety-eight men stop work on own homes at government Sl.ooo.ueu homestead project protesting alleged misman agement and waste; resident engi neer says strikers trying lo dic tate management personnel. Kansas City. Mo. -- Strilie lend er announces plan to picket ma jority of Montgomery Ward stores because of freight movement (tbroiiL'h picket lines at plant here. o j- : A3:U,UUU ALLUI 1 CIJ FOR UMPQUA JETTY An allotment of llaO.norj for con linuation of jetty construction at the mouth of the Cmpqua river was contained in the list announc ed today by Secretary of War Wood ring from Hits year's rivers and harbors appropriation, it wasjthe report received, was drowned state penitent iai y for assaull and reported from Washington. D . C. j after striking Ms he.nl on a io k j robbery in Multno-mih count v. The allotment to the L'mpqua rlv-jd, n ,jVe into shallow vater. deceived a conditional pat don to er was a pari of the $01.47S.2"1 , He resided in Roseburg until a'day fiom Governor Martin, appropriation for rivers and liar-1 few months ago, v. hen he vent toj Kltthaler. who has worked In the bors. The monev provided for tn-wjCnsper, to accept cniplovmeut. Tvo'iatp flax plant at thft prison, must work is in addition to the $2.r..(i"M sisters live In Wyoming. An es-'woik with the Orczou Flax aso proposed and approved for dretlg- Ut ranged wire resides near Myrtle 'nation at Springfield, the terms ing. ADJOURNMENT NEAR AT HAND FOR KRESS Should Finish Labors in 3 Weeks, Rayburn States; Wage-Hour Bill Up For Disposal. WASHINGTON. July 2!!. (AIM Majority Leader Kayburn told the house Unlay that congress should he able to adjourn in three weeks. "Pnless thero is a lie up on the oini bill hi the senate, by some thing arising to call a halt," Hay burn said, "we can finish all of this (legislative) program in three weeks. There is a degree" of cer tainty that we can adjourn at that time, and not he forced into a ses sion between now and December," Quest loned by Minority leader SnHl iiboul the program. Huyhuru iiid accounts of it. published to day following a conference yester day between President Roosevelt and legislative leaders, "were en roll ntging." He spoke of prospects of senate tiou this week on wage and hour and bousing legislation, and on Ihe ourt bill next week. 1 hese meas ures head the program. The house labor committee, he r,i.ld. should approve the wage und hour bill this week ou the first of next. At bis press conference. Speak er Hankhead said he thought house members were "going to be rea sonable about not being stamped ed" into adjournment. The court bill to which Itayburii 'referred Is awaiting setmlo action behind two other measures Ihe wage-hour bill and the Wagner housing hill. Administration leaders apparent ly wauled to gel the bousing bill out of the way before Ihe court measure in order to keep it from being left unacted upon in Hie rush for adjournment which may de velop once the coin t Issue is final ly disposed of. The senate met p hour early today In an atlempl to complete action on the wage-hour bill be fore nightfall, Mr. Hoosevell was scheduled to meet Ibis afternoon with congress men iuleresled in driving through sugar legislation. Wage-Hour Bill Assailed Senator Austin til.. Vt.l, opened (he attack ou the wage-hour incus (Continued on page (D PRIZES TO BE ASKED Representatives of community fairs to he held in Douglas county will be in Roseburg Saturday to assist a committee from the Hose burg chamber of commerce in so liciting merchants .for prizes to be given exhibit winners. Kach ol Ihe district fairs is expected lo have a delegation in Roseburg lo assist in He olicila(ion, which will be held between the hours of X ami II a. m. Saturday, and only those districts represented will share in the prizes, it is slated. Incidentally, merchandise given by the merchants will not be awarded at tho respective fairs, but win ners will be given credit slips tor the Hpctiticd amount upon presen tation. ROOSEVEVLT NAMES ROGERS FOR I. C. C. WASHINGTON, July 20 (AIM President Koosevelt nominal ed John L. Rogers of Tennessee, to day to be a member or the inter state commerce commission. He will succeed Hugh M. Tale, also of Tennessee, whose term ie cently expired, Another nominated was Robert Fraer yf Pennsylvania, selected In be miiiisler to Kl Salvador, lie w'll sileieed Flank P. Corrigaii of Ohio, named minister to Panama. MARK RICE DROWNS IN DIVING MISHAP Word was received here this morning of Mm diith at Osper, Wyoming, last night or Mark HI HiV son or Mr. and Mrs. 1-1. L. Rice of Roseburg. Mark, according to ' Creek. Woman Faints , As Bear Bites; Chain Saves Her LA (1KANDF, Ore., July 29.- (AP) Mra, Rwanda Scoti, 111, had u narrow escape fnmi death (his moili ng r. hen u pet hear at tacked .ier. As il was. she is recov- ring in a hospital here Horn leg w omuls. Mrs. Scott, daiif;U" it Mr. and Irs. Ira Caiitrell, fed tlm three-ear-old black hear this morning and noticed Ids chain was knot ted. Siie attempted to un! not it when the bear suddenly turned ou her, luting her right leg and claw ing her. She lunged backwards ami the bear loosened his grip, in turlated by the teste of blood, he again attempted to reach the young woman, who bad fainted, but the huin held htm Just short of where she fell. Mrs. Caiitrell said her tiauuhter hiid roMpcd and swam with the hear frequently and thai until IhUt luoi nin;-; he had never appeared un ruly. FRKDKRICK, Md.. Julv 20 (AIM The rage of n mountain farmer, who claimed he had been robbed of $2.1oo by two women who "took the money from under my pillow," left all three dead today. Sheriff Hiltner said the, farmer. Charles Martin. F.K. Hhol and kill- d the two women in the Ulue mountain section 12 miles from here,)ihen, as an officer approach- ml Mlartln's home- lo arrest him, committed suicide. Ofllcers found the body of Mrs. Hannah Hahu, ;ts, more 111 an a mile from her home. In the Hahu home they found Mrs. JWary Al bright, :tti. of (iettysburg, Pa., fa tally wounded. Her young child. unharmed, was seated in her lap. William 11. Creen. a farmer who lived near the I lahu home, told Sheriff Hiltner that Martin came It) bis home late yesterday and na id: "l just shot those women. They took me home Monday night and robbed me or S2.100. They took Ihe money from under my pillow." Sheriff Hiltner said a prelimi nary search for the money Martin claimed was stolen from him was unsuccessful. Governor Charles H. Martin and members nf Hie stale game com mission are expected to make a brief visit In Roseburg over the w cek-cml as a pa i t of a 1 w o-day tour to the Tish and game hatch eries of Oregon. The trip will star! Friday and continue through Saturday with the return trip be ing made Sunday. The olficial party Is expected lo visit the Rock ek trout hatcti- ery. which was recently enlarged md completely iebu.lt to afford one or Hie finest plants of its kind. The new hatchery has been at tracting much interest on the part of local residents and tourists. who have Inspected the property since i he changes were made. YOUTH NABBED AS PULLMAN ROBBER KI'GKNK, July 20 - (AIM Louis Mradley, IS, wanted lor ques tioning in con Lection with Hie robbery or a Spokane. Port land train, was upprchended at Divide, 20 miles south or here, was lodged in tin Lane county Jail today. The youth allegedly was caught tilling clothing in a Pullman car Tuesday night, bin he leaped from Ihe train und escaped. Yesterday he was caught by a section foreman at Divide ami held for Lane county authorities. Shi riff Sw arts said w In u he ar rested Hradley be had two Identi fied w -ate ties and $o in cash on Ins person. PENITENTIARY FLAX WORKER PARDONED SALFM. July 20.--IAP)- Petit Mllh;ilcr. who has served rive I years of a lu-vear sentence in Hu' of the pardon provider). VOL. XXVI mm CHINESE ARMY'S EFFORT 10 OUST FOES FROM CITY BRINGS ON BOMBARDMENT Thousands of Non-Combatants Said Killed, Main Buildings Destroyed; Americans, Other Aliens Huddle in Cellars; Chinese Troops Quit Peiping. By the Associated Press. Flames from Japanese aerial bombardments roared through sections of Tientsin tonight after planes bearing the red insignia of the rising sun took be thousands of non-combatant men, women and children killed and injured. The bombardment, carried out by the Japanese in an at tempt lo rout a Chinese attuck that threatened to drive Japa nese from ihe city, endangered the lives of many Americans and olher foreigners. 7 North China Reverses Only Beginning on War On Japan "Invasion." NANKIN!, July 20. -( AIM lieu eruliHsimo Chiang Kai-Shek, head of China's central government, de clared In a statement circulated throughout Hu ualioii tonight (hat China will noh surrender to Japa nese pressure. Chiang said negotiations with Ja pan were impossible under present conditions. He dismissed north China reverses with (he slate incut that "this was only Ihe !: ginning" of hostilities. "Tho centra! government will not surrender to Japanese pres sure," he declared. "These tempo rary military reverses must not be considered as defeals. Instead, hos tilities in the Peiping and Tientsin area are not regarded as ended. He reiterated his stand thai any settlement with Japan must not in fringe upon China's territorial in tegrity and that the central gov ernment will not permit restric tions Upon positions held by tne Chinese 2!) lb army. I blang exonerated (ieneral Sung Cheh-i nun, erslvhlle Hopch Cha (Continued on puge ti) RELIEF BOARD NOT RULER OF RA JOBS SALKM, July 20. (AIM Tho stale relier committee does not have (he right In supervise Ihe work of ihe Oregon rural rehabili tation corporation and is not re sponsible for Hie corporation's ads. Atlm-ucy General I. H. Van Winkle ruled toduy In au opinion for Flmer H. Gaudy,' slate relief administrator. Van Winkle held further thai (he commit lee is not responsible lor auditing books or the corpora Hon. The designation by law of the corporal Ion as an agency of t he committee dors not confer any powers ou the corpoiatiou to bind ihe commiltee without its authori zation, he said. Irish Terrorism Causes England's Press to Score Royal Pair's Visit LONDON, July 20 (AIM Protest against (he official ar rangements thai look King ieorge and (Juccn Klizaheth (o northern I relate! for a corona l Inn eelelirn tlon thai w as marred by wide spread political terrorism was voiced hoie loday. The Dally Minor, referring lo the peril involved In tho visit yes terday, said: "May we ask why II was thought necessary for the king and queen to go to Ilclfast?" Ilelfast police conducted an ex haustive inquiry of a powerful laud mine which exploited -near the route of Ihe royal procession but had made no arrests in this connection. The lister authorities declared the explosion, at n warehouse, was planned deliberately and executed hut there was no olficial intima lion it was an attempt on (he life of the king. Rather, it was believed the ter rorists had tried to damage the cltv's main power and light plant, which was nearby. The mid day explosion, within a half mile from where Oeome and Klizaheth were rldiiift to city hall. was but part ot an arrny of sab for Pencil and Pad. TURMOIL World In full nf it I hone iluyn. iul ur l will i'imiii' liir reai hiuK ivsultt. Am you lieepinK abreast of I ho Union by rcailliiK Vir homo illy ilully? I'pio-ihe miniiiu wlm NO. 309 OF THE EVENING NEWS a toll declared by Chinese to .ieut. Ceneral Katsuki, Japa nese commander in north China, told foreign consuls the action was protect the 10,000 Japanese who live In tho Tientsin Japanese concession. He deelafd his men acted in accordance with tho Box er protocol of 1001, in which China undertook not to station troops within two miles of Tientsin. Among (he 1,370 Americans In Tientsin was Lieutenant Paet V. Caraway, sou of Senator llattlo W, Caraway of ArkansuH. Chinese Quit Peiping Peace came to Peiping and Its en virons when Chinese troops with drew and (ieneral Sung Cheh-Quau, commander of the 2!tlh Chinese, army, went out uiul General Chanr Isu-Chung, pro-Japanese command er of Ihe :txth division, beciimo chief authority' In- lh-urea.-3 In Tokyo, Japan's foreign minis ter, Kol;l Hirota, told the diet tho Japanese govern men t would re jeel any "interference" by u third power lit the conflict. Japanese ofneers declared tho acule situation compelled them to Ignore earlier assurances not to expose the cityV, fureigu residents to peril. Wavt on wave of bombing squad rons set many of Tientsin's princi pal buildings aHre, particularly (ho railroad center, and burned tho In ternational bridge connecting tho foreign concessions and the Chi nese city. Ilomhs rained on densely popu lated ChiucHe quarters. One village, on Tientsin's outskirts, wa:i au in icrno. Americans Gain Shelter Moth at Tientsin and Pulping, Americans huddled in the epilur- of the foreign concessions and swarmed for safety in embuHsy compounds, spurred to shelter by memories of tho wave of foreign slaying dining the Hoxer rebel- (CouHuued nn page C) HIKER STONES AUTO, RECEIVES LICKING SALKM, J uly 20. (AIM A hlich-hlker look a licking from an automobile driver on the Paiitlc highway near here yesterday. Tin hitch-hiker, angered because the car, carrying a California license, it id not stop in response to his thumb signal, bulled a rock that broke the rear window of the ve hicle. The driver stopped long i nough to whip the hiker. A witness who reported the In cident did not learn their numes. otage and terrorism that was cred ited to Iilsh rt-puhitcans who are opposed to Ihe monarchy. N'urtliei n Ireland's civic guards Si.tiilcd (lie tU-soIatu hills ir (he lifler and Irish free slate frontlor w hern most of the out breaks oc curred wholesale burning ot Hrillsh customs huts. The Daily Mirror referred to Ilelfast s "cauldron of religious or fanatical hatreds" and asked: "What next? A (rip to iho bor ders ot Abyssinm? A cull ou Mis ter Gandhi? A visit to Peiping?'' The Times termed yeslerday'd events "childish exhibitions" hut the Telegraph found it "difficult to speak w U li restraint." Tho conservative Morning Post remarked "the civilized world by now is too familiar with tho nox ious character of Irish gangster politics to foel anything but dis gust for their lutest manifesto Hon." lidding: "We have not yet noticed any message of regret from Mistor Do Valera (Eamon Do Valora, pres ident of the IrUh froet state) that these republican outrages Bhould have coincided with the king's vis It to Ilelfast."